Howie Clark has played every position but pitcher in his professional career. Carlos Tosca has been reluctant to give call-ups Jason Kershner, Brian Bowles and now Josh Towers more than limited action in low-risk situations, so don't expect Clark to get a lot of playing time. The Jays will likely have Bordick start the lion share of games at third base, with Berg spelling him. Nevertheless, Clark's lefty bat could be useful coming off the bench in pinch-hitting situations.

Clark is a career minor leaguer who made his major league debut with Baltimore last year at the age of 28. He's been in the Orioles' organisation until this year, with the exception of 2001, which he spent in the Mexican League and the (Independent) Western League.

Clark has shown average or slightly below-average power with very good control of the strike-zone. His walk rate has been solidly above average. Here are his composite numbers in the Baltimore system.

His improvement in avoiding strikeouts is the most interesting aspect of Clark's career to date. Striking out in only 7% of one's opportunties (as he did in AAA) would put a player among the A.L. leaders most years. Clark is 41 of 79 in minor league steal attempts, so don't expect much more than station to station baserunning.

Side note: the Jays have gone from a pen of 4 righties and 3 lefties to 6 righties and 1 lefty. That hasn't stopped the manager from making frequent pitching changes.

Dave Berg's good enough for the purpose he serves, but his AB's that do produce decent results, put me to sleep. If for only this, I hope Tosca lets Clark have some time at third.

Between listening to Cerutti's "crooked number this" and "crooked leg that" or Candiotti's "situational hitting" or "situational urination", a healthy dose of "scrapy play" is sure to follow what with Johnson and Clark now on the field.

By the way, didn't that sacrifice bunt come in handy last night? It had a positive effect and the Jays scored a run. One run in a sixteen run game. It sure looked purdy though.

Side note: the Jays have gone from a pen of 4 righties and 3 lefties to 6 righties and 1 lefty. That hasn't stopped the manager from making frequent pitching changes.

...and I do believe the demotion of Kershner was justified with the "too many lefties" argument.

From the news:"Carlos Tosca defended his pitching changes saying 'We needed a two run dinger in the seventh -- that's a role we'd like Sturtze to fill, and Cliff [Politte] wasn't available. We like our pitchers to have roles. For example, Trev [Trever Miller] is a guy we feel we can rely on in one batter situations to get the guy aboard. We feel he can do the job against righthander too, he just needs to be given the chance...'"